More v. Deyoe

29 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 208
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 29 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 208 (More v. Deyoe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
More v. Deyoe, 29 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 208 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1880).

Opinions

Bookes, J.:

A difficulty seems to exist in this case, which must, as we think, ■control its decision on this appeal, growing out of the rejection of ■evidence offered by the defendants on the trial. However, before ■considering this difficulty, we should examine the questions urged upon our attention by the defendant’s counsel, which go to the ■ entire right of act/ion ¡ for if the action be not maintainable by the plaintiff at all on the facts proved, the ruling of the referee in the rejection of evidence becomes wholly unimportant; and the case, ¡should be put at rest on other grounds.

[216]*216The action, ejectment, was commenced originally by Taylor More, the husband of the present plaintiff; and issue was joined between the parties by the service of answers by the defendants-respectively. Thereupon the plaintiff died, having made a valid will by which he devised to his widow, the present plaintiff, one-third of his real estate, and to his minor children, named in the-title of the action, the remaining two-thirds. The action was then, by order of the court, revived and continued by the present plaintiff in her own name, for the recovery of the third devised to her, and also for the recovery of the two-thirds as guardian in socage of" her infant children. The defendants thereupon put in an amended answer; but interposed no specific objection to the right of the-plaintiff to recover, on the ground that the action could not be revived and continued by her as to the right of the infant children. The case then may be considered as if originally brought by the plaintiff in her own right as to one-third of the premises, and asgua-rdian in socage of the children as to the remaining two-thirds.

It is urged that the action cannot be prosecuted by the plaintiff' as to the two-thirds devised to her children. This objection wedeern untenable. This is clearly so, if we hold that the case stands-the same as if brought by the plaintiff, as guardian in socage, as regards the two-thirds owned by the children. TJie mother, as. guardian in socage of her infant children, may maintain ejectment to recover the possession of their real estate against a party unlawfully withholding it against her right of occupancy. A guardian in socage has the custody of the land of the infant, and may maintain ejectment against one wrongfully in possession. (2 R. S., 6 ed., 1092; 3 Id., 169; Holmes v. Seely, 17 Wend., 75; Beecher v. Crouse, 19 Id., 306; Seaton v. Davis, 1 N. Y. Sup’m. Ct. [T. & C.], 91; Bartholomew v. Lyon, 3 Id., 771; Cagger v. Lansing, 61 N. Y., 417.) As the issues were made on the pleadings, the case-stood for trial as if originally commenced by the plaintiff in her own right for the part of the premises devised to her, and as-guardian in socage for her children, who, as was claimed, owned the remaining part.' The right to revive and continue the action in the name of the plaintiff, was determined by the order of revivor,, from which no appeal was taken, nor was any specific objection-[217]*217taken by the defendants’ amended answers, thereafter interposed. But the right of revivor, as here granted, seems to be well authorized by statute. (3 R. S., 6 ed., 575; Code of Civ. Pro., § 757; James v. Bennett, 10 Wend., 540; Boynton v. Hoyt, 1 Denio, 57; St. John v. Croel, 10 How. Pr., 253.) The objection that the action was not maintainable by the plaintiff for the two-thirds devised to-the children, or could not be prosecuted by her as guardian in. socage, is not well taken. The action was also maintainable against; Gilbert and Maynard, joined with Deyo, the tenant in possession, under them. (Former Code, § 118; Code of Civ. Pro., § 447; Abeel v. Van Gelder, 36 N. Y., 513; Finnegan v. Carraher, 47 Id., 493.)

Nor is the objection that the defendants were to be deemed mortgagees in possession tenable. The defendants, Gilbert and Maynard, entered, and held under conveyance to them, from Elizabeth More, who, at the time of making the deed, owned the equity of redemption; and they so held under this deed until the foreclosure! of their mortgage, when they became purchasers. But if their mortgage was void for usury, as was found to be the fact by the; referee, they could not defend as mortgagees in possession, for then,, as to the plaintiff, they had no rights to be protected under it. In. that case the defendants could neither build up or maintain any right whatsoever founded upon it, as against any one entitled to insist upon its invalidity. This brings us to the question whether the plaintiff here might so insist.

The plaintiff claimed as devisee under Taylor More, a purchaser-on foreclosure sale under a valid mortgage. He held, in law, the-position of grantee from the mortgagor. Thus he and his deviseeswere in privity in estate with the mortgagor; and hence, as has-been repeatedly held, might insist upon and set up usury against a prior mortgage given by the same mortgagor, which was an apparent lien on the premises. Taylor More was not to be deemed a purchaser merely of the equity of redemption, as regards the holder of the usurious mortgage. But he acquired, by his purchase, the position which the mortgagor held at the time the lien of the valid mortgage took effect, with all the rights then pertaining to the mortgagor. One of those -rights was a right to insist that the prior mortgage [218]*218was void for usury. Without citing and collating the many cases wherein this subject has been discussed, it is only necessary to ref cito the rule as at present settled, given in the note to the case of the Merchants' Exchange Nat. Bank v. Com. Warehouse Co. (49 N. Y. 635, 643). It is there stated that “ all privies to the borrower, whether in blood, representation or estate, may, both in law and equity, by the appropriate legal and equitable remedies and defenses, attack •or defend against a contract or security given by the borrower which is tainted with usury, on the ground of such usury, where such contract or security affects the estate derived by them from the borrower.” The correctness of this rule is also asserted iu a recent •case in the Court of Appeals. (Knickerbocker Life Insurance Co. v. Nelson, MS. opinion by Danforth, J.) Here, Taylor More, by his purchase at the foreclosure sale, under a valid mort.gage, was in privity in estate with the mortgagor, hence might (as might the latter) insist upon the invalidity of the prior mortgage for usury, both mortgages having been made by the same party. Nor do the defendants, Gilbert and Maynard, gain any advantage •over the plaintiff by their foreclosure. They were not bona fide purchasers without notice of the usury. (Jackson v. Dominick, 14 Johns. 435; Hyland v. Stafford, 10 Barb. 558; Bissell v. Kellogg, 60 Id., 617.)

It is urged that the plaintiff’s devisor, and those claiming through •or under him, are estopped from insisting upon the invalidity of the prior mortgage, because of certain transactions between the mortgagor and parties other than Taylor More. ' It seems that the mortgagor, W. P. More, after the giving of the mortgage to the defendants Gilbert and Maynard, and before giving the mortgage to the plaintiff, conveyed the premises to one A. P. Crary. The •deed to Crary was made subject to the former mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/more-v-deyoe-nysupct-1880.